Speaker Stumbo Favors Medicaid Expansion in Kentucky

FRANKFORT, Ky. -- The Speaker of the Kentucky House says it’s a no-brainer for Kentucky to expand its Medicaid program under the Affordable Care Act.

Under the health care law, states can expanded their Medicaid rolls to 138 percent of the poverty line and for three years, the federal government will pay for the expansion.

Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear has yet to decide on whether Kentucky will expand, saying he will calculating costs after 2017, when the feds pay only 90 percent of expansion.

But Democratic House Speaker Greg Stumbo says he’s fully for Medicaid expansion and has encouraged the governor to agree with him.

“I think it would be a penny wise and a pound foolish not to find the money,” Stumbo says.

Republicans have called for a rejection of the expansion, arguing the state can’t afford the extra 10 percent costs in 2017 and beyond.

But Stumbo disagrees, saying Kentucky status as a state that takes more taxes than it gives means Medicaid expansion works for the commonwealth.

“It’d be foolish not to do it. We receive more, we’re a recipient state, we receive more back from the implementation than any other state in the nation, plus it covers somewhere around half a million Kentuckians who currently don’t have care so yes, I favor it,” he says.